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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Hill Training!

Hills are potentially the most
specific form of strength training runners can do.When
done right, your hill training will make you a
stronger all-around runner, and
learning different strategies for hills will help you achieve your race
day goals.

Too
many runners – newbies and seasoned runners alike – struggle with hills.They make the mistake
of “attacking” the uphill and “recovering” on the downhill.This is in most cases
the wrong approach.By charging the uphill you’ll needlessly burn up valuable energy and strength,
and then squander your opportunity to pick up speed “for free” on the downhill.Even
worse,
you might end up riding the brakes
on the downhill, which actually requires additional, precious energy and
puts you at greater
risk for injury.

CHOOSING
THE RIGHT HILL FOR THE WORKOUT

If you’re not used to running hills, start with the basics.Try
to find a hill that is runnable; one that is not too steep and not too long.For beginners, an incline
that takes around 30-60 seconds to run up is usually a good place to start.Inclines of 3-5% would be considered
by most to be relatively gradual.Start small and build from there.

Have some trails in your area?Those are often a great place
to get in some hill training, and you can’t beat the scenery along the
way. Live
in a flat area like Houston or New
Orleans? You’ll have to get imaginative to find hills to run, but it’s
worth
the effort.

THE EVEN EFFORT ETHOD

Your first lesson will be to learn to run up the hill while maintaining the same effort level
that you were putting out on level ground.You want to keep your rhythm – the rate of your leg turnover
– the same as what you had on level ground. As you climb uphill, your stride will naturally shorten, and your
pace will slow. That’s okay, just focus on your level of effort.Your mantra should be “patience”
and “even effort”.You
want to have some energy left at the
top of the hill. If you’re
struggling and out of breath at the top, you didn’t maintain even
effort!

As
you crest the
top of the hill, carry your momentum
over the top and down the other side. When running downhill you want to
avoid holding
back and using your leg muscles to
“brake”.Excessive braking needlessly
wastes valuable muscle energy. Your mantra for the descents should be “light and quick, light and quick.”On the downhills, learn to enjoy the wonderful gift of gravity you’ve just been given. Go with the flow.Your cadence or rhythm on the
downhill should be similar or slightly faster than on level ground –
but you’re
covering a greater distance during
the flight phase (when both feet are off the ground) so your speed will
be faster.Just go with it but avoid sprinting.Try to avoid leaning back too far and landing heavy on your
heels.

Lots
of runners aren’t
aware that you have to practice
downhill running. But if you can master the art of the downhill, you’ll
be able to pass
plenty of others on race day –
always good for a much-needed emotional boost – and by not braking
excessively
on the downhill you’ll have more
energy in the final miles of the race for that last push to the finish.

THE STEADY PACE METHOD

After you’ve mastered the “even
effort method”, you’re ready to take the next step: trying to maintain your PACE as you run
up a hill. You’ll know
you’re ready to progress to this when you’re consistently accomplishing
hills of 30-90 seconds in duration
with no significant increase in perceived effort at the top (you’ve
learned how to
achieve an even effort) and you’re consistently running well on the downhill.For runners
working hills for the first time, this may take a few weeks.

Again, start with relatively shallow hills that are short
in duration (30-60 seconds long, inclines of perhaps 3-5% grade).As
you master this technique you can
work your way up to more challenging
terrain (steeper grades or longer hills) as you feel you’re ready.

In the steady pace method, you’ll
try to maintain not only the same cadence, but also try to keep your speed or pace the same as what you
were doing on level ground.This is going to feel harder.Keep your face and shoulders
relaxed and focus your energy on your hips to power you up the hill.You’re not sprinting or attacking…
you’re just trying to maintain the same speed you had on level ground. In
order to keep your speed up, you have to push off with a bit more power.As you crest the hill, carry your
momentum up and over the top and focus on running well on the downhill side.Running downhill well takes
good strength and it also takes practice. The downhill mantra is still “light and quick, light
and quick”.

ON RACE DAY – THE PAYOFF!

If
you’ve practiced a variety of hills – short ones, long ones, steep ones
–
and you’ve mastered the even effort
and steady pace methods, you now have strategies that will help you
succeed!

Is that hill in front
of you fairly steep or long?You might want to pull out your “even effort” approach and run
that one at the same effort level you were putting out on level ground.Is it a shorter or shallower incline?Perhaps it’s time to pull out the “steady pace” approach – resist the tendency to slow down
as you go up the hill.At the crest, when those around you are starting their “recovery”, you
now have the advantage because you’ve practiced downhill running!Carry your momentum over the top
just as you’ve practiced and you’ll find yourself passing those around you on the downhill. Use
smart hill running techniques to your advantage!

Use your imagination and find some hills near you to play with, introduce them gradually, focus on good form, and
you’ll reap the benefit.

Here’s to hills – and learning to accept the free gift of gravity!

Visualize your success -- and get there by training SMART

Janet
is a Registered
Clinical Exercise Physiologist, a
Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist and certified running
coach who specializes
in helping individuals improve their
health, fitness and athletic performance. Janet has been coaching
runners in groups
and individually for over18 years
and has helped athletes rehabilitate from injuries for over 25 years.
She is
a certified running coach and
coaching instructor with the Road Runners Club of America, a certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist with the National Strength & Conditioning Association, and a Registered Clinical Exercise Physiologist with the American College of Sports Medicine.

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Olga Varlamova, LMT

Graduated Medical School in Moscow, Russia, in 1993, with degree of MD in Pediatrics. Moved to US and worked in BioMedical Research as a Research Scientist for 18 years. Published over a dozen scientific papers. Attended Oregon School of Massage in Portland and finished licensing as an LMT at Texas Healing Arts Institute in 2010. Also, a certified Yoga-Fit yoga instructor and an Endurance Running Coach.